Glossary · Market

Refillable perfume

A refillable perfume is a fragrance presented in a reusable bottle designed to be replenished with the same juice rather than discarded after use, reducing packaging waste and offering a lower cost per milliliter on subsequent purchases; the format entered mainstream niche perfumery in the 2020s under environmental and regulatory pressure (Fragrantica, accessed 2026-05-27).

Definition

Thierry Mugler introduced the concept in 1992 with Angel's boutique fountain refill stations, well ahead of the industry. The practice expanded after 2020, driven by European packaging regulations (Regulation EU 2022/2096 on packaging and packaging waste) and growing consumer pressure toward circular economy practices in the beauty sector.

Contemporary refill formats include: boutique stations (bottle brought in for direct filling), mail-order refill pouches (sealed sachet poured into the original bottle at home), and full refill bottles carrying the same juice at a reduced price. The actual carbon saving depends on logistics distance and original bottle material (Now Smell This, accessed 2026-05-27).

Niche houses with refill programs

  • Le Labo: systematic refill program on City Exclusive fragrances at approximately 20% discount versus the full bottle price.
  • Diptyque: in-boutique refill stations for most core eau de toilette and eau de parfum references since 2021.
  • Maison Francis Kurkdjian: refill pouches available for Baccarat Rouge 540 and core references.
  • Hermès: in-boutique refills for the Hermessences collection, reinforcing the exclusive in-store ritual (official sites, accessed 2026-05-27).

Sources

Published 2026-05-27 · Updated 2026-05-27 · Last fact check: 2026-05-27 · Osmetheca